Spiritual Exercises for the Days of the Week
I recommend doing this often as you can, you should make the time.
Most of us would like to live in a more
spiritually-conscious way, but
the task can seem so daunting. Where to
begin? The great teacher,
author, and philosopher Rudolph Steiner had
a wonderful idea: he
identified one gentle spiritual task for
each day of the week. After
all, seven is a magical number (think of the
seven chakras), and having
seven days of the week as a container makes
deep soul-sense.
You can use these simple, meaningful
exercises as a basis for
meditation, or simply as touchstones to keep
in mind throughout the day.
Step by step, we can gently bring ourselves
into greater clarity and
awareness. Breaking the process down into
daily tasks makes it so
do-able, and the end result will be greater
soul-strength and
consciousness.
SATURDAY: Right Thinking
Be aware of your thoughts. Gradually learn
to separate in your thoughts
the essential from the nonessential, the
eternal from the transitory,
and truth from mere opinion. When listening
to conversation, try to
become inwardly still, renouncing all
agreement and, more important, all
negative judgments (criticism and
rejection). Do this in both thought
and feeling.
SUNDAY: Right Judgment
Decide on even the most insignificant issues
only after full,
well-founded deliberation and reflection.
Abstain from doing anything
that has no significant reason. Once we are
convinced that a decision is
correct, adhere to it with inner
steadfastness. This is "right judgment"
because it was made independently of
attraction or aversion.
MONDAY: Right Word
Avoid the usual sort of conversation that
involves jumbled, simultaneous
cross-talk. Listen thoughtfully to every
statement and answer. Consider
every approach. Never speak without a
reason. Prefer silence. Try not to
talk too much or too little. Listen quietly
and process what you hear.
TUESDAY: Right Deed
Our outer actions should not disturb others.
When we are moved inwardly
(by conscience) to act, carefully weight how
best to employ the occasion
for the good of the whole, and the happiness
of others and the eternal.
When you act from yourself and your own
initiative, weigh the
consequences of your actions in the most
fundamental way.
WEDNESDAY: Right Standpoint
In ordering your life, live in harmony with
nature and spirit. Do not
get buried in the external knickknacks of
life. Avoid all that brings
restlessness and haste to your life. Be
neither impetuous nor lazy.
Consider life as a means of inner work and
development and act
accordingly.
THURSDAY: Right Striving
Take care not to do anything beyond your
power, but don't leave anything
undone that is within your ability. Pose
goals that are connected with
the highest of human responsibilities. In
relation to these exercises,
for example, try to develop yourself so that
later---if not
immediately--you may be better able to help
and advise others. Let the
preceding exercises become a
habit!
FRIDAY: Right Memory
Strive to learn as much as possible from
life. Nothing happens that does
not give us the opportunity to gather
experiences that are useful for
life. If you have done something incorrectly
or incompletely, it becomes
an opportunity to do it correctly or
completely later on. When you see
others act, observe them with the same end
in mind (but not without
love). Do nothing without looking at past
experiences that may help in
your decisions and your actions. If you are
attentive, you can learn
much from everyone. including small
children.
)0(
Copyright: Adapted from Start Now! A Book of
Soul and Spiritual Exercises by Rudolph Steiner
From: GrannyMoon’s
Morning Feast Archives 2003
Comments
Post a Comment
Remember if You can't say something nice, don't say anything at all.